after the author’s visit to Panama

Stanisław Barszczak, Witness of human faith.
The fact that he had turned onto CINTA COSTERA that day and saw the unfortunate window was a pure coincidence. It rained for nine months, and this week full of sunshine in the heat. However, it could have been a week, a month, or even a year later; and yet no, he went there that day. Of course, sooner or later he would go there anyway – in the end, whenever he visited the new city, he had to see every corner of it. At the beginning he set a very meticulous plan: go through the whole street from the beginning to the end, go back parallel, turn into the next – it was like walking through the avenues in the supermarket – but soon came to an intersection where something caught his attention and all good intentions. That’s how it happened when he got to via Espania, then via Porras (see the Parque Recreativo Omar Torrijos); although from the cities he has visited so far, New York was the most suitable for exploration in a systematic way; at least in the case of quarters north of Fourteenth Street, the chaos of Fourteenth Street South did not particularly bother him; it certainly was not worse there than in London, Rome, Paris, or even the Boston North End, and he loved to visit these places. He started his walk around Panama City from San Francisco district, Centro de Convenciones Atlapa; then he turned west on via Israel, then close to Multiplaza Mall, south on via Italia, until he reached the intersection with Avenida Balboa and then, enchanted by its beauty, he turned right. Basically there were no gardens, fountains or pavements with magnificent trees on the street; nor did it resemble Váci utca in Budapest, Champs-Élysées in Paris, or Lombard Street in San Francisco, but nevertheless it felt its unique character and rich history. It was a narrow, one-way street, remembering many events in the history of the city. On both sides there were low, mostly the multi-storey tower blocks from the second half of the 20th century, referring to the spirit of the era to the Pope John Paul II style. There were narrow fire escapes to the brick facades few houses here with floral motifs, arched windows and stone lintels, while all kinds of premises were located on the ground floor, from cozy cafes to branded clothing stores. There were also establishments with many years of tradition, such as a hair salon, art gallery and a suitcase store. Some of the display windows covered the metal blinds, which meant that the work day had already ended. He walked the middle of the Avenida Balboa, not caring about cars. From here he had the best view of the surrounding buildings; cars were not a problem for him. He could look ahead and sideways, he could also look back at any moment to learn and remember every detail, and if necessary, make a quick move. He was most interested in urban architecture – layout of buildings and infrastructure; but he did not pay much attention to the people he met. He did not want to talk; why should he talk to some young redheaded stranger who just stood on the corner and smoked a cigarette. He did not care what she wanted to express with her dress, consisting of a leather jacket, a short skirt, and probably intentionally torn black tights; he also had no intention of asking an athletic woman in a black baseball cap who had just passed him by going to the other side of the street, as she thought the Panama City people would manage this year. Baseball did not interest him at all. He was also not interested in why a dozen people with guides in their pockets listen to a woman standing in the middle of a group; I guess she was some kind of tour pilot and that’s it. When he reached Old City and Panama City Cathedral, his attention was drawn to the restaurant on the south-east corner of the street. She looked inviting. On the sidewalk in front of the apartment were white tables with yellow, plastic chairs, but no one sat there. “Come in and warm up,” read the inscription on the window at the entrance. He came closer and looked through the glass. Inside, people were drinking coffee, working on laptops, reading newspapers. The restaurant window reflected a car that he had seen before, not once, not twice, during his travels. A non-distinctive toyota car or something like that, with equipment on the roof. If he did not know where he came from, he would have thought that someone was following him. In any case, he did not want to worry about his head any more; he preferred to look at the guests in the restaurant for a moment longer. He wished he could go inside and drink a cafe latte or a cappuccino; he could almost smell the coffee, but he knew he had to go on; after all, he had a large piece of the world ahead of him, and time was short. The next day he intended to go to the Clayton, the Apostolic Nunciature of the Holy See, and if he could get enough of the city, who knows, maybe the day after tomorrow he could go to the Tocumen airport. And yet he knew that he would remember this place: an inscription on the window, tables and chairs outside, as well as other premises at Cinta Costera and narrow passages between the buildings. He will also remember everything he saw in the surrounding streets: from Calle 24 Este till Calle 45 Este. Everything, without exception. Suddenly, about a third of a quarter from the intersection with Parque Urraca, he looked up. And it was a real coincidence. The mere fact that he turned into Avenida Balboa was not a big deviation from his habits. In the end, he usually looked at the premises, read the inscriptions in the exhibition windows, memorized the house numbers, and often looked at the café’s regulars. However, he did not always look up buildings above the first floor. Sometimes he forgot about it, sometimes he did not have time. He might as well have passed the entire street and did not notice the window at all; just in this, not a different tenement house. What if it was not just a coincidence, just a peculiar kind of test? He knew that he would manage to be ready, but those who wanted to use his talents certainly needed convincing proof before cooperating. The window opened up was on the five floor, above the news-and newspaper kiosk – again the same car reflected in the glass – and a shop with aprons. Half of the bottom part of the window obscured the air conditioner. His attention was caught by something white, just above the air conditioner. At first glance it resembled a styrofoam head that can be seen in a department store or a hair salon. Strange that someone puts something like this in the window of their apartment, he thought. A bald head with no expression, holding a guard over City Costera. He came to the conclusion that absolutely everything can be found in the living windows of Panama City. At the owner’s place, he would at least have sun glasses that would give the head some personality; maybe a bit of eccentricity. Though, on the other hand, he had to admit that people did not really consider him an eccentric. However, the longer he looked, the less he was sure that he could see the styrofoam head. Its surface seemed more shimmering and even slippery. It looked rather like it was made of soft plastic, such as used for bags in the grocery store or matte covers for clothes from dry cleaners. He narrowed his eyes, straining his eyes. The white, almost round object in the window still resembled the shape of the head. Under the plastic sheath, something like the nose, forehead and chin, and even open lips were visible, as if someone was breathing hard. Or he seemed to shout loudly. It was not a white stocking superimposed on someone’s head; the gloss of the material indicated a different type of material. Who would be so foolish as to put a plastic bag on his head? In this way, you can easily suffocate. That someone would have to pull the plastic bag in the back of the head, otherwise the contours of the face would not be outlined. And yet there were neither hands nor arms. Or maybe… Did he become a witness to the murder? Has anyone just put a plastic bag on the victim’s head, wanting to strangle it, cut off the supply of oxygen? Did he see the outline of wide open mouths that desperately caught oxygen? Who was the victim? Man? Woman? Who was the murderer? Suddenly he remembered the two boys in “the window of village,” close to the village beach, many years ago. However, this time he was sure that he saw an adult person whose life was coming to an end. That’s what it looked like. He felt his heart beat harder. He has seen many during his travels; things that should not have happened. However, he had never witnessed a murder before. Yes, murders. He was certain now. He did not shout, he did not reach for his cell phone to call the police, he did not ask anyone for help, he did not run up the stairs to the second floor of the building to stop the drama going on. Instead, he simply stretched his hand shyly, as though hoping to touch the victim’s face from the five floor… He was so absorbed in what was happening in the window that he did not notice at first that someone was coming to the door. The door opened. “Vincent, get your ass and go,” someone shouted from the corridor. -What’s for supper tonight? – He asked. – Grilled hamburgers. “Okay,” said Thomas, the young man indifferently in front of the computer. His friend, Mr. TOMASZ, also had some kind of schizophrenia, he did not pay attention to car horns and people storing the street. Vincent, he got him last saturday. Mr Thomas spun around again in his chair to look again at the immobilized image of the window on the overly large computer screen… Did anyone else see it? Did anyone else look up? No one saw the boy in the window. Nobody looked up. Nobody helped him, Vincent thought. The man left a picture of the window on the computer screen so that he could return to it, in order to be able to return to it after dinner, and decide what to do next. (the story will follow soon)

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